Connecting your wireless Windows 10 device to your network:

Find the wireless icon located in the lower right-hand corner of your computer screen. It should look like wireless waves emanating our from a point (much like the "D" in our DerbyNet logo!)

left-click on this icon. It should pull open a menu of available wireless networks.

Select the appropriate network and follow the on-screen instructions. If you are unsure about your wireless name/WPA2 password, contact our technical support team. NOTE: We will only collect this information if you have one of our routers, but we will be happy to help out if not.

You should now be connected to your internet.

Checking active bandwidth usage on a Windows 10 device:

Right-click on an empty area on your toolbar (the toolbar is the horizontal bar at the bottom of your screen that contains the start button, application icons, and the current time.) This will open a sub-menu.

Once you are in your Task Manager, left-click the "More Details" option. If you see "Fewer Details," you can skip this step.

At the top of the Task Manager window, select the Performance tab.

Depending on whether you are hard-wired into your router or wireless, locate the appropriate graph on the left-hand side of the window (Ethernet for hardwired, or Wifi for wireless,) and left-click the small graph to see a larger breakdown of that connection on the right-hand side.

On the right-hand side of the window you will now see that connection with lots of information. To see what you are downloading on that connection, location the Receive number. This will tell you how much data you are downloading. Likewise, the Sending number indicates how much data you are uploading.